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The planned launch is part of SpaceX's multibillion-dollar Starlink project, which has been approved by the US communications agency, to send almost 12,000 satellites into space.

A previous demonstration of prototypes called Tintin A and B was carried out in February 2018 with coverage good enough to play fast response video games, according to Musk.

The latest satellites have a production design unlike the earlier models, though Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX's president and chief operating officer, reportedly told attendees at the recent Satellite 2019 conference that these will still be scaled down without intersatellite links and will not start launching satellites for actual service until later this year.

The SpaceX CEO shared the above photo on Twitter showing a rocket packed full with what he referred to the 'first 60' satellites. It is the first mission of Starlink, the billionaire's project to bring high-speed internet coverage to the globe through orbiting satellites

Mr Musk posted two pictures in the Twitter post, the first showing a satellite-packed rocket and the second his own Tesla car in a rocket (above) - to demonstrate the size of the spacecraft. The Tesla CEO first posted the picture of his red sports car in 2017 on Instagram

According to an announcement from Ms Shotwell, the company will launch dozens of satellites into space as a beginning demonstration for the Starlink project.

The preliminary launches will deploy pared down versions of its satellites that will function more as a test, she said.

Notably, the trial versions will lack the ability to communicate with one another - a feature that will help full-fledged satellites avoid colliding into each other.

'This next batch of satellites will really be a demonstration set for us to see the deployment scheme and start putting our network together,' Ms Shotwell said at the conference in Washington, DC, as reported by SpaceNews.

She added the company could conduct as many as six launched this year depending on how the upcoming demonstration launches go.

The latest comments from the SpaceX CEO's Twitter account on the expected launch of the '60 satellites' this week as part of the Starlink project to bring internet coverage to Earth

Elon Musk (pictured) is behind SpaceX and its project, Starlink, which aims to launch thousands of satellites capable of providing high speed, low-latency internet

Recently, Starlink received re-approval from the FCC to get the project underway after altering its plans to launch satellites last month.

According to the company, it had to readjust its plans to avoid orbiting space junk that could damage the devices.

The modified plan would launch more than 1,500 of the satellites at around 342 miles (550km) above Earth.

According to FCC filings, in total, SpaceX's Starlink project could eventually include as many as 12,000 satellites orbiting just above Earth's atmosphere and offer users speeds as high as 1GBPS with a latency as low as 25ms.

While Starlink will pioneer the novel way of providing domestic internet, it will be far from uncontested in its plans.

Amazon unveiled its intentions behind a mysterious plan, dubbed Project Kuiper, initially announced last September which will launch 3,236 satellites into low-orbit around the Earth.

Project Kuiper has yet to receive regulatory approval for its project and hasn't yet provided a timeline for when satellites might enter orbit.

SpaceX wil contend with the e-tailing giant, Amazon, in its quest to conquer the world of satellite-derived internet

Another competitor, the London headquartered company, OneWeb, launched its first six successful satellites in February and has raised a formidable $1.25 billion (£970 million) to support future launches.

Perhaps the biggest indicator that the race to provide widely available satellite-based internet is in full swing is a recent spat between OneWeb and SpaceX.

In a complaint to the FCC, OneWeb and satellite broadband competitor Kepler Communications, alleged that SpaceX's Starlink plans would interfere with their operations by crowding Earth's orbit with satellites.

The FCC, however, ruled in favour of SpaceX citing the ability of the company's satellites to manoeuvre around objects.

One major concern regarding the new wave of satellites is the potential to greatly increase the amount of space junk orbiting Earth.

Already, an array of junk from launches and satellite collisions blankets Earth's orbit, threatening to derail future launches and endangering current orbitals like the International Space Station.

WHAT IS STARLINK AND WHAT ARE ITS GOALS?

Elon Musk's SpaceX has launched the first two of its 'Starlink' space internet satellites.

They are the first in a constellation of thousands of satellites, designed to provide low-cost broadband internet service from low Earth orbit.

The constellation, informally known as Starlink, and under development at SpaceX's facilities in Redmond, Washington.

Its goal is to beam superfast internet into your home from space.

While satellite internet has been around for a while, it has suffered from high latency and unreliable connections.

Starlink is different. SpaceX says putting a 'constellation' of satellites in low earth orbit would provide high-speed, cable-like internet all over the world.

The billionaire's company wants to create the global system to help it generate more cash.

Musk has previously said the venture could give three billion people who currently do not have access to the internet a cheap way of getting online.

It could also help fund a future city on Mars.

Helping humanity reach the red planet is one of Musk's long-stated aims and was what inspired him to start SpaceX.

The company recently filed plans with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to launch 4,425 satellites into orbit above the Earth - three times as many that are currently in operation.

'Once fully deployed, the SpaceX system will pass over virtually all parts of the Earth's surface and therefore, in principle, have the ability to provide ubiquitous global service,' the firm said.

'Every point on the Earth's surface will see, at all times, a SpaceX satellite.'

The network will provide internet access to the US and the rest of the world, it added.

It is expected to take more than five years and $9.8 billion (£7.1bn) of investment, although satellite internet has proved an expensive market in the past and analysts expect the final bill will be higher.

Musk compared the project to 'rebuilding the internet in space', as it would reduce reliance on the existing network of undersea fibre-optic cables which criss-cross the planet.

In the US, the FCC welcomed the scheme as a way to provide internet connections to more people.